More on the last words of Card. Caffarra, and a little chat

carlo-caffarra-con-benedetto-XVIBack on 8 September I posted something already about the last words of His Eminence Carlo Card. Caffarra. The substance of the words had been related to me by a reliable source.

I now find that Antonio Socci had something more. HERE (My translation.)

Many Catholics in the last few years have look upon Carlo Card. Caffarra as one of the few lights in the present shadows.

A priest confided to me that, in the last few days, he went to see to tell him of his sorrow, referring a few facts, for the daily disaster that we are living in the Church.

The Cardinal burst into tears and told him:

“The Lord will not abandon His Church. There were twelve Apostles, and the Lord will begin again with a few. Imagine the suffering of St. Athanasius who remained the only one to defend the Truth for the love of Christ, of the Church and men. We have to have, faith, hope and fortitude.”

This priest confided in me: “The Cardinal was deeply grieved, but he conveyed to me so much courage and so much love for the Church.

Christ’s promises to the Church must be true.  That doesn’t mean that what we get to live in the Church is all beer and skittles.  There are times of bloody persecution in the Church’s history.  They may come again.  There have been times of spiritual upheaval and persecution.  They are here again.  The Lord reminded us not so much to fear harm to the body, but rather to fear spiritual harm, that can lead us away from God and to perdition.

I get many notes from people who are afraid and angry.

Perhaps read a little less churchy news.  Also, when the clamp of frustration tightens, why not sit down with a really good book, such as Scripture and the Catechism of the Council of Trent or the Catechism of the Catholic Church… or any other of a myriad of great resources.  Review.. or learn for the first time… the content of the Faith in which you believe, asking the Holy Spirit to increase in you the faith by which you believe, even as Card. Caffarra said at his earthly end.

Calm.  Breathe.  Pray.  Study.  Work.  Live.

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A new development about the Bones of St. Peter!

This sounds like something out of a novel I’ve on and off worked on for years.

Via Telegraph:

Bones attributed to St Peter found by chance in 1,000-year-old church in Rome

ones attributed to St. Peter have been found by chance in a church in Rome during routine restoration work, 2,000 years after the apostle’s death.

The relics of the saint, who is regarded as the first Pope, were found in clay pots in the 1,000-year-old Church of Santa Maria in Cappella in the district of Trastevere, a medieval warren of cobbled lanes on the banks of the Tiber River.

The bones were discovered when a worker lifted up a large marble slab near the medieval altar of the church, which has been closed to the public for 35 years because of structural problems.

He came across two Roman-era pots with inscriptions on their lids indicating that inside were not only bone fragments from St Peter but also three early popes – Cornelius, Callixtus and Felix – as well as four early Christian martyrs.

The workman immediately notified the deacon of the church, Massimiliano Floridi. “There were two clay pots which were inscribed with the names of early popes – Peter, Felix, Callixtus and Cornelius. I’m not an archaeologist but I understood immediately that they were very old,” he told Rai Uno, an Italian television channel. “Looking at them, I felt very emotional.”

It had been known for centuries that the relics might exist – they are recorded on a stone inscription in the church, which claimed they were kept alongside a fragment of a dress worn by the Blessed Virgin. But until now, the relics had never been found.

The remains have been handed to the Vatican for further study. Without proper analysis, it is impossible to say whether they belong to St Peter. “We’re waiting for a detailed study to be undertaken,” said the deacon. “A DNA comparison between these bones and those kept by the Vatican would shed light on the issue.”

A Vatican spokesman said it was too early to comment on the discovery.

It is not yet known how or why the relics came to be interred in the Church of Santa Maria in Cappella, which was consecrated in 1090.

One theory is that they were transferred there from the Vatican by Pope Urban II at a time of schism within the Catholic Church.

While Urban was generally recognised as the legitimate pope, he faced a challenge from an anti-pope, Clement III, who had set up a rival power base in Rome, backed by the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV. The church in Trastevere was closely linked to Pope Urban and may have been seen by him as a secure place in which to hide the bones.

[…]

Read the rest there.

For COOL!

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“People are fighting in the streets for what is left.”

PreppersarecrazyMany times I have badgered and pushed you readers to do some basic “prep” in the case of natural or manmade disasters.  Were there to be some catastrophic event where you are, could you get yourself and loved ones to safety or keep them safe in place?

Consider that, were services to break down, most people have food and maybe water for about 3 days. After that it is possible that things can go Lord Of The Flies really fast.

This is not a theoretical question in the wake of hurricane Irma.

From the NYT:

Desperation Mounts in Caribbean Islands: ‘All the Food Is Gone’

MARIGOT, St. Martin — At dawn, people began to gather, quietly planning for survival after Hurricane Irma.

They started with the grocery stores, scavenging what they needed for sustenance: water, crackers, fruit.

But by nightfall on Thursday, what had been a search for food took a more menacing turn, as groups of people, some of them armed, swooped in and took whatever of value was left: electronics, appliances and vehicles.

“All the food is gone now,” Jacques Charbonnier, a 63-year-old resident of St. Martin, said in an interview on Sunday. “People are fighting in the streets for what is left.”

[…]

Maybe it is time for some of you to read some of the dystopian disaster genre novels which anticipate this sort of scenario and behavior.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Semper Paratus, TEOTWAWKI | Tagged , ,
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9/11 and bullying

On this day, 9/11, when we should all, with damp eyes, wear our war faces, I am conscious of bullying.

There is no question that homosexuals have, in the past and present, been the victims of bullying.  That surely is not what Our Lord would want.

I am getting texts and emails from all sorts of sources right now about behind the scenes maneuvering of certain promoters of the homosexualist agenda who are using back channels, as it were, to try to get their critics fired or silenced.

COWARDS.

NOW, they are doing the bullying.  Why?  Because they can.  And, ironically, because it suits them.

You would think that – having been bullied – they might think twice about bullying.  But, no. Human nature is what it is.  Also, speaking of nature – or rather the unnatural – since I stepped off the airplane in Rome and I engaged the Italian switch in my head, I am reminded of a word for homosexuals which comes from the Latin ferox.   

Homosexual inclinations are objectively disordered.  They can be sinful, if consent of will is given to them.  Homosexual acts are always sinful, because they are objectively disordered and against natural law.  They are un-natural.  To call them anything else is simply wrong.

And, in the midst of all this, I am sent this story from Toronto Catholic:

James Martin S.J. accuses Catholics of being “traditionalist, homophobic, closed-minded…” for not accepting homosexuality

James Martin S.J., in a recent symposium at [Jesuit run] Fordham University, continues his promotion of homosexuality. Martin then turned his attention to Catholics who actually believe what the Church teaches: that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered and gravely sinful.

The following video clip shows James Martin S.J. expressing astonishment that “even the most traditionalist, homophobic, closed-minded Catholic cannot look at my friend and say: that is a loving act…” Oh Jim, Are you really telling Catholics that acts that cry to Heaven for vengeance are loving? Guess God made quite a few BIG mistakes.

Sodomy is never a loving act, dear readers.  At best, it is a manifestation of a twisting of the concept of friendship.  Otherwise, it is a sinful, disordered act, often of aggression or self-degradation.  It is not charity to say that evil is good.

Speaking of a “Jim”, I had some hate mail from a “Jim” today.  99% of my hate mail is from angry homosexuals, by the way.  “Jim” is not the Jesuit mentioned, above, nor am I in the least suggesting that he is.  In fact, some quick searching reveals that he is a tax accountant or some such in Muskegon.

Anyway.

I don’t like bullies.

UPDATE:

And now I read in PJMedia:

UK Speaker: Same-Sex Marriage Won’t Be ‘Proper’ Until Churches Can’t Opt Out

In a shocking attack on religious freedom and even property rights, the speaker of Britain’s House of Commons argued that the country won’t have “proper equal marriage” until churches are unable to turn away requests to host a same-sex marriage.

“I still feel we’ll only have proper equal marriage when you can bloody well get married in a church if you want to do so, without having to fight the church for the equality that should be your right,” John Bercow, the Commons speaker, declared at a PinkNews reception in July.

Britain legalized same-sex marriage in 2013, but Bercow suggested that the LGBT issue will not be settled until churches are unable to refuse to host such weddings. “We don’t want to behave like it’s all over, everything’s been done and nothing remains, because that isn’t true,” he added.

[…]

Posted in Lighter fare, Sin That Cries To Heaven | Tagged , ,
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ROME Day 0: Feet on the ground and … dragging a little

I have arrived in Rome to great tales of rain.  Apparently there was so much rain that runways at FCO were flooded.  One this is for sure: there was flood of people at passport control… it took over an hour.  Total bedlam.

Rome.


Having obtain entry to the apartment I went on hunt for groceries, etc., in Campo de’ Fiori.

Lunch.  I went, of course, to my customary vegetable stand.

In the late afternoon, Mass was said at Ss. Trinità.   They had flooding there because of the rain.  All sorts of stuff was out and drying off.

Back home, supper (fettucine rustiche with pesto rosso con tartufo, a big mixed salad, a few slices of milanese), and bed.  I ate on the terrace and watched the sunset fade.



Meanwhile, on this anniversary of 9/11 here’s my sentiment today:

SCREW YOU, TERRORISTS!

And hail to the first responders.  BTW that’s my NYPD Holy Name Society challenge coin.   I am a proud honorary member.  ‘Rah!

 

 

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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FIGHT BACK against anti-Catholics… including those IN the Church

si_vis_pacemYou must rush to read the whole of Robert Royal’s latest column.  HERE

I preface it with a reminder that I posted a tongue in check call to arms that wasn’t really tongue in cheek at all.  HERE

Here’s the pattern that I have seen repeat itself over and over and over in the Church.  Libs, let’s say lib priests though this is present in many spheres, can do any damn thing they want and proper authority rarely, if ever, disciplines or corrects them.  But if “conservatives” do something, the bishop is on the phone to beat the guy black and blue and, in effect, bully him into dropping something that he has the right, and moral high ground to do.  Priests going into parishes are told: “For heaven’s sake don’t upset The Proletariate… People. Don’t make changes for a year!”  Libs immediately start to tear down everything the previous conservative pastor built.  Conservatives tend to obey.  But… do they raise their heads up for juuuuust a winky tink, Bishop Thrasybulus – no, rather, since I’m in Rome – Bishop Lucius Tarquinius Superbus is on the blower calling them “downtown” for a little Tall Poppy treatment.

Lay people.  It is time to FIGHT BACK.

FIGHT BACK in the secular sphere when the anti-Catholic bigots go after us.

FIGHT BACK in the ecclesial sphere when the… ummmm… anti-Catholic bigots go after us.

Self-absorbed… GRRRRR.

I’m starting on a new program of special Psalms.  You know the ones.  The psalms written under inspiration but which the tender snowflakes don’t want to hear.  They plug their ears when they are mentioned and sing “And I will raaaaaaise you uuuuup….”, so they don’t have to acknowledge they exist.   Special Psalms.

Now go read Royal.

What are you waiting for?

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, Cri de Coeur, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, Semper Paratus, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged
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Ireland: manmade vocation wasteland

Jesus_Lamb_Storm_Boat_640Ireland and the Catholic Church in Ireland have their problems.  Sadly, they gave some of those problems also to the USA.  However, since I am forever harping on praying for vocations to the priesthood, one problem in particular struck me today.

From IrishCentral:

Only six Irish sign up for the priesthood – a 222-year-record low

A mere six men will be starting the classes required to become a priest at the National Seminary at St. Patrick’s College Maynooth in County Kildare this fall – the lowest number in the seminary’s more than two centuries of existence.

Fifteen men, the Irish Catholic reports, are currently undergoing preparatory work that will allow them to become seminarians in the fall of 2018.

Maynooth, which opened in 1795, was once the largest seminary in the world with space for 500 men to train to become priests.

Last year there were only 80 men undergoing the necessary studies at the seminary to become members of the clergy.

The number is likely to have dipped even further this year following something of a crisis last summer when a number of seminarians were caught using the gay hookup app Grindr. [No, no!  Nothing to see here.  I wonder if Fishwrap (aka National Sodomitic Reporter) has reported on this.] As a result, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin ordered three trainees to leave the seminary and continue their studies at the Irish college in Rome.

“I have my own reasons for doing this,” the Archbishop said at the time.

At the time critics of the move warned authorities that his actions would damage Maynooth; Fr. Brendan Hoban said it was “unfair” and said it did not address the underlying issue.

[…]

It’s a vicious circle by now, a tornado of failure, a hurricane of identity suicide.

The vocations crisis was in part manufactured. In Ireland it is so bad that it is a self-perpetuating vortex of self-inflicted wounds.

Talk about manmade climate change!

I’m reminded that Benedict XVI, in his Letter to the Irish people, recommended a return to traditional practices.

Do you want where you live to look like Ireland?

Pray for vocations. Be willing to offer your own children. Support your priests and seminarians.

Stop coddling perversity. Return to the Mass of our forebears as much as possible. Bring back our devotions and processions and many seasonal and festal blessings. Use sacramentals. Pray the Rosary.

Do penance for sins and offenses against the Sacred Heart and Immaculate Heart.

HERE

Posted in Liberals, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , ,
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TRAVEL and DATA and KEEPGO and You

I’m in Rome for the Summorum Pontificum Pilgrimage.  While here, I will use my KeepGo as a WiFi hotspot for data for my mobile phone.  I’ve written about it here.

And, because of a generous reader, I’m working on a trip to the UK.

This KeepGo thing is a handy gizmo.  Those of who who travel a lot might consider it.  Be sure to use my link and I will get data for each referral.

>>HERE<<

I hope to greet many readers and friends who will be in Rome for the pilgrimage.

 

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Pange lingua gloriosi

Some people are freaking out a little in the wake of the news that the Holy Father decided to restrict the role of the Congregation for Divine Worship in the preparation of liturgical translations.  Now the bishops conferences will be pretty much in charge the preparation and Rome won’t, on its own initiative, make changes before approval.

Keep a few things in mind:

1 – Pope Francis did NOT overturn the norms for translation in Liturgiam authenticam.  If conferences prepare translations they have to conform to LA’s norms.

2 – The English speaking conferences which implemented a new translation in 2011 are unlikely to want to go to war again so soon.  They won’t be changing the translation.

3 – Rome can still withhold approval.  Pray that the staff there is good and strong and not a bunch of candybacksides.

4 – Remember that the Extraordinary Form is of equal dignity and that it has a far longer and richer track record that this johnny-come-lately, new-fangled form.  If you don’t want to be caught in ever shifting prayer horizons, or if you simply want Latin (as the Council Fathers desired) and desire to be treated like an adult and see to your own translations with the help of a variety of old hand missal and other resources, you can vote with your feet.  I’m just sayin’… be Vatican II!  Go to the Extraordinary Form.  After all, it’s got the Latin that Council mandated, Gregorian chant, every opportunity for full, active and actual participation that the Ordinary Form does.   With the insights gained over the last 50 years or so, the older, traditional form also fulfills virtually all of the desires of the Council, if you put yourself into and don’t just sit, passively, and have it spoon fed to you in English with all sorts of extra talk and options.

Thus endeth the rant.

Working up a translation of a liturgical text is many layered.   For many years I wrote a weekly column comparing the Latin and the translations.  This blog was born of that effort, for I originally thought that it would be an archive for my columns.  HAH!

I regularly still post some of this work, so that you can see what can be found in a prayer, when you open the hood in look inside.  Language difficulty: isn’t a hood also a bonnet?  Make a choice. Choices limit what we can convey in the text.  Hood and bonnets, are parts of cars but they are both “head wear”, but the words have different connotations. We can find lots of varying connotations in our LATIN texts, some of which are ancient and which need to be recovered or made available to our modern ears.

So, there’s a lot going on in these Latin texts.  Let’s have a look at the Collect I sang this morning in a Solemn Mass.

Don’t worry, I’ll get to “the finger” below.

This Sunday’s Collect for the Extraordinary Form survived the snipping and pasting of the Consilium and the late Annibale Bugnini’s liturgical experts to be used in the Ordinary Form on Tuesday of the 2nd week of Lent.  Figure that one out.

Custodi, Domine, quaesumus, Ecclesiam tuam propitiatione perpetua: et quia sine te labitur humana mortalitas; tuis semper auxiliis et abstrahatur a noxiis, et ad salutaria dirigatur.

Propitiatio, in its fundamental meaning, is “an appeasing, atonement, propitiation”. The dictionary of liturgical Latin Blaise/Dumas also gives us a view of the word as “favor”. This makes sense. God has been appeased and rendered favorable again towards us sinners by the propitiatory actions Christ fulfilled on the Cross. We have renewed these through the centuries in Holy Mass.

Mortalitas refers, as you might guess, to the fact that we die, our mortality. Inherent in the word is the concept that we die in our flesh. So, you ought also to hear “flesh” when you hear mortalitas.

Labitur is from labor. This is not the substantive labor but the verb, labor, lapsus. It means, “to glide, fall, to move gently along a smooth surface, to fall, slide”.

Auxilium, in the plural, has a military overtone. There is also a medical undertone too, “an antidote, remedy, in the most extended sense of the word”. Pair this up with noxius, a, um, which points at things which are injurious or harmful. There is a moral element as well or “a fault, offence, trespass”.

Salutaria is the plural of neuter salutare which looks like an infinitive but isn’t. Our constant companion the Lewis & Short Dictionary says the neuter substantive salutare is “salvation, deliverance, health” in later Latin. The adjectival form, salutaris, is “of or belonging to well-being, healthful, wholesome”. Think of English “salutary” and O salutaris hostia in the Eucharistic hymn by St. Thomas Aquinas (+1274).

When this word is in the neuter plural (salutaria) there is a phrase in Latin bibere salutaria alicui … to drink one’s health” or literally “to drink healths to someone”. In Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet during the famous “Queen Mab” speech Mercutio declares that a soldier dreams, inter alia, of “healths five fathom deep,” (I, iv) and in Henry VIII the King says to Cardinal Wolsey, “I have half a dozen healths to drink to these” (I, iv).

Wine and health are closely related in the ancient world. In the parable of the Good Samaritan the good passerby pours oil and wine into the wounds of the man who was assaulted (Luke 10:25-37). St. Paul wrote to St. Timothy:

“No longer drink only water, but take a little wine for the sake of your stomach and your frequent ailments” (1 Tim 5:23).

Apart from its resemblance to blood, it is no surprise that Christ should choose this healthful daily staple as the matter of our saving Sacrament.

Wine was often safer to drink than water in the ancient world, though it was nearly always mixed with water to some extent. To drink uncut wine, merum in Latin (from the adjective merus “unadulterated”, giving us the English word “mere”) was considered barbaric. Cicero (+43 BC) and others hurled that accusation at Marcus Antonius (+31 BC) who was a renowned merum swiller.

Catholics sing the word merum in the hymn of the Holy Thursday liturgy, Pange lingua gloriosi, by St. Thomas Aquinas: “fitque sanguis Christi merum… and the (uncut) wine becomes the Blood of Christ”. In sacramental terms, there is a link between wine and health in the sense of salvation. During Holy Mass, we offer gifts of wine with water to become our spiritual “healths” once it is changed into the Blood of Christ. These archaic and literary references help us drill into the language of our prayers.

Let’s drill some more. Did you know that the index finger was called digitus salutaris, and that the ancient Romans held it up when greeting people? We don’t do that very often these days. I believe modern usage, at least on roadways, more commonly employs a different finger.

The special designations of fingers in Latin are pollex (thumb); index or salutaris (forefinger); medius, infamis or impudicus (middle finger); minimo proximus or medicinalis (ring finger); minimus (little finger, “pinky”). The priest, during Mass, always held the consecrated Host only between his thumb and the digitus salutaris. One way to harm a priest, our mediator at the altar and in the confessional, was to chop off his index fingers. Priests without those fingers were forbidden to say Mass without special permission from the Holy See.  Those fingers were clearly understood by those who hate the Church, priesthood, and the Eucharist as being especially important.  North American martyr missionaries were mutilated like this.

Let’s push this a little more.

The adjective medicinalis, “medicinal, healing”, comes from the verb medeor or medico, the original meaning of which has to do with “to heal” by magic. The verb traces back to the stem med– or “middle”. So, medicus, “doctor” is associated with “mediator”. We can think of this in terms of the English word “medium”, who is a mediator with the spirit world. The Latin poet Silius Italicus (Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus +101) called a magician “medicus vulgus” (Punica, III, 300). The ancients saw what we call the “ring finger” as having magical powers. This is reflected in the name digitus medicinalis, the “medicinal/magic” finger.

One of the most important Patristic Christological images in the ancient Church is Christus Medicus, the “Physician”. St. Augustine does amazing things with this image, and Christus Mediator. He is the doctor of the ailing soul. He is the only mediator between God and man.

SUPER LITERAL RENDERING:

Guard your Church, we beseech You, O Lord, with perpetual favor and, since without You our mortal flesh slides toward ruin, by means of your helping remedies let it be pulled back from injuries and be guided unto saving healths.

Watch how the old incarnation of ICEL ruined the imagery.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

Lord, watch over your Church,
and guide it with your unfailing love.
Protect us from what could harm us
and lead us to what will save us.
Help us always, for without you we are bound to fail.

We won’t ever have to hear that one again!

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

Guard your Church, we pray, O Lord, in your unceasing mercy,
and, since without you mortal humanity is sure to fall,
may we be kept by your constant helps from all harm
and directed to all that brings salvation
.

We all know the image of the slippery slope. Once you are on this slope, scrabble and scratch with your weak hands as you can, and you can’t get a purchase.

You slide and slide, faster and faster.  Down.

Our fallen nature and our habitual sins drag us onto the slope from which we cannot save ourselves.  Sometime we only hang on to the cliff by our fingers.

In the sacraments and teachings of Holy Church, Christ extends the fingers of His saving hand.

He draws us back from a deadly slide with His Almighty hand.

The moderation queue is on, and I will soon by on a long flight.  Patience.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Drill, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , ,
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My View For Awhile: Anniversay Edition

I’m on my way to Rome for the Summorum Pontificum pilgrimage.  I’m taking happy thoughts of gratitude to Pope Benedict along with great hope for many more future benefits from this monumentally important gift to the Church.


Meanwhile, spoke by phone with my mother in Florida.  They are hunkered down and doing well as it blows and blows.   So far so good.  She and her friends were making breakfast when I called and all were in good spirits.


So far so good, my bag is on the plane.

UPDATE

I had just under an hour in the lounge.  It was super busy. Delta has upped its game in DTW however.

Now we endure the hurly burly of boarding.  Since I am on an asile every lady with a large … bag has the chance to use my shoulder as a turnstile.   Do they have no sense that when carrying things their own personal space grows?


In any event.   To opt for onboard wifi or not to opt.  That is the question.   Whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of my emails, or by ignoring postpone them.   To read… to sleep no more.  Aye that’s the rub.  ‘Cause it’s all about the jet lag, right?  This is about the only thing I do in which I dislike going East.

UPDATE

By phone my mother reports that all is well.    It’s pretty nasty there but not as bad as it could have been.  They may hunt up the recipe for Manhattans.

UPDATE 

Remember that when you plug your phone into the USB port on many airplanes the system’s network can probably “see” your phone. I have data blocker.

Posted in On the road, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, What Fr. Z is up to |
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